Integrating population-based metabolomics with computational microbiome modelling identifies methanol as a urinary biomarker for protective diet-microbiome-host interactions

Abstract

Background: Diet-microbiome interactions are core to human health, in particular through bacterial fibre degradation pathways. However, biomarkers reflective of these interactions are not well described. Methods: Using the population-based SHIP-START-0 (n=4017), we combined metabolome-wide screenings with elastic net machine learning models on 33 food items captured by a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) and 43 targeted urine nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) metabolites, identifying methanol as a marker of plant-derived food items. We utilised the independent SHIP-START-0 cohort for replication of food-metabolite associations. Moreover, constraint-based microbiome community modelling using the Human Microbiome data (n=149) was performed to predict and analyse the contribution of the microbiome to the human methanol pools through bacterial fibre degradation. Finally, we employed prospective survival analysis in the SHIP-START-0 cohort, testing urinary methanol on its predictive value for mortality. Results: Among 21 metabolites associated with 17 dietary FFQ variables after correction for multiple testing, urinary methanol emerged as the top hit for a range of plant-derived food items. In line, constraint-based community modelling demonstrated that gut microbiomes can produce methanol via pectin degradation with the genera Bacteroides (68.9%) and Faecalibacterium (20.6%) being primarily responsible. Moreover, microbial methanol production capacity was a marker of high microbiome diversity. At last, prospective survival analysis in SHIP-START-0 revealed that higher urinary methanol is associated with lower all-cause mortality in fully adjusted Cox regressions. Conclusion: Integrating population-based metabolomics and computational microbiome modelling identified urinary methanol as a promising biomarker for protective diet-microbiome interactions linked to microbial pectin degradation. Keywords: methanol, gut microbiome, metabolites, food frequency, fibre intake

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Feb 2025
Accepted
29 Jul 2025
First published
05 Aug 2025
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY license

Food Funct., 2025, Accepted Manuscript

Integrating population-based metabolomics with computational microbiome modelling identifies methanol as a urinary biomarker for protective diet-microbiome-host interactions

K. Klier, A. Mehrjerd, D. Fässler, M. Franck, A. Weihs, K. Budde, M. Bahls, F. Frost, A. Henning, A. Heinken, H. Völzke, M. Dörr, M. Nauck, H. J. Grabe, N. Friedrich and J. Hertel, Food Funct., 2025, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D5FO00761E

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